illegal arrested 4 smuggling 13 illegals on delivery route to Alabama, So typical!!!

Wolfmoon

U B U & I'll B Me 4 USA!
Jan 15, 2009
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Vail Valley: 13 suspected illegal immigrants in custody

Some of the suspects have been deported before, Eagle County Sheriff's Office says
http://www.vaildaily.com/article/20100615/NEWS/100619731/1078&ParentProfile=1062

In my opinion this is so typical:

Vail, Colorado -- Alejandro Espinoza-Rodriguez, 24 is an illegal alien from Mexico. He was driving a white van with curtains on the windows and he was pulled over. The arresting officer said that he “was pulled over near Wolcott because the driver failed to move over to the left lane as another deputy was removing a boulder from the roadway.”

The officer found 13 illegal aliens inside the van, there were 9 men who probably gang raped the 3 women and 1 child. He told officers he was on a delivery route so to speak, and he was dropping illegal aliens to different places along his way, his end destination was Alabama.

He probably initially had more than 13 illegal aliens in his van and he must have dropped some of them off in between Mexico and Colorado. They usually like to pack those vans with at least 22 people or more and13 is a light load, and a total waste of gasoline and effort. The people in the van were probably picked up from a drop house in Ca. TX. or Az. They will be deported and then they will have to raise more money to pay the Coyotes to get across the border again, they know the drill all too well.

Espinoza-Rodriguez was charged with:

Felony human smuggling
Not having insurance
Driving without a valid operator’s license
Failure to yield right of way to emergency vehicle

His bail was set for $ 50,000.00 and Immigration Customs and Enforcement (ICE) has a hold on him. ICE also has a hold on the 13 illegal aliens who were riding in the van. ICE will be deporting them to Mexico, Guatemala and El Salvador. Some of them had already been deported from the U.S. and have returned.

The only way to keep illegal aliens from returning once they have been deported is to close the border and secure it with boots on the ground! Or else deporting them is like throwing good money after bad.

Call your politicians and tell them “NO we are NOT going to allow Amnesty or Open Borders” so they better do their jobs that we pay them to do, and start protecting America’s sovereignty or we will vote them out of office. Use the email address OR the (800) phone numbers in the signature below.

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Mayhem an' murder on Mexican highway...
:eusa_eh:
Attackers leave 14 corpses on major Mexican highway
Thu Aug 9, 2012 - Attackers kidnapped and murdered 14 men and left their corpses in a Mercedes Benz van on a major highway in the state of San Luis Potosi in central Mexico, a prosecutor said Thursday.
The men were kidnapped Wednesday in the northern state of Coauhuila, where the vehicle was stolen in an armed robbery, an official from the attorney general's office of San Luis Potosi said. The corpses were found early Thursday morning. The attack bore the hallmarks of drug cartels, but it was not immediately clear which group carried out the murders, or who the victims were, said the official, who asked that her name not be used for security reasons. Later Thursday, federal police raided an alleged drug cartel safe house in San Luis Potosi's state capital, leading to an hour long shoot-out with gunmen, an official from the federal police said.

Mexico TV station Milenio showed amateur photos of students at a nearby university hiding under tables as the firefight raged. The federal officer said several suspected drug traffickers were arrested following the shooting. In 2011, a U.S. official was killed in an armed assault on his vehicle in San Luis Potosi. Thursday's attack is the fifth time in recent months that 14 corpses have been dumped in Mexico, signaling the number may be some sort of code for drug traffickers.

In April, assailants strung up the corpses of 14 men in Nuevo Laredo, on the border with Texas. Coolers containing 14 men's heads were left on a city street the next month. In June, police found 14 corpses in a vehicle near the town hall of Mante, in Tamaulipas state, and another 14 on a road in neighboring Veracruz state.

There have been more than 55,000 gangland murders and execution style hits since President Felipe Calderon took power in December 2006 and declared a national crackdown on drug gangs. Many of the victims have been identified as innocent civilians unconnected to the drug trade. President-elect Enrique Pena Nieto takes power in December and has promised to reduce the rate of homicides and kidnappings.

Source

See also:

Dozens Killed in Wave of Mexican Drug Violence
More than 40 bodies found in three locales
Fourteen bodies were found in a truck Thursday in the state of San Luis Potosi, at least 17 people have been killed since Sunday in the port of Acapulco, and 12 others were reported killed in 24 hours in metropolitan Mexico City. The string of bloody reports grabbed headlines in Mexico, reminding the public that drug-related violence continues unabated as the six-year mark approaches in the federal government's declared war on drug cartels. The bodies found Thursday were in a truck left near a gasoline station on the highway between the city of San Luis Potosi and Zacatecas state. Authorities said in initial statements that all the victims were male and had come from the neighboring border state of Coahuila.

Body dumps along highways are a fixture of the conflict between Mexico's most powerful drug cartels, Sinaloa and the Zetas. San Luis Potosi, however, until recently had not seen the same level of violence as other parts of the country. In Acapulco, where smaller rival drug-trafficking groups are still locked in a struggle for control, the victims of an attack on a family included a pregnant woman and a 3-year-old boy, El Sol de Acapulco reported, accompanied by graphic images. They were killed along with a man and two other women in an early Wednesday morning attack on a "humble house" in a low-income neighborhood called Colonia Ampliacion 5 de Mayo, the newspaper said. At least 12 other people have been killed in Acapulco since Sunday.

In Mexico City, seen as a relative haven from the drug-related violence that besets many other regions of the country, 12 people were killed in the metropolitan zone on Tuesday and Wednesday. Four men were shot to death during a neighborhood street festival in the populous borough of Iztapalapa on Tuesday afternoon. In Colonia Country Club, an upper-class neighborhood in the Coyoacan district, one suspected criminal was killed in a gunfight when federal authorities served a search warrant on a house. The federal prosecutor's office said two Colombians and one Israeli were arrested, but they were not identified.Early Wednesday, the owner and five employees of a bar in the suburb of Ciudad Nezahualcoyotl were slain by armed men, reports said.

The Mexico City tabloid La Prensa reported that a local crime group that calls itself "The Business" killed the six victims because the bar, La Pachangona, would not pay an extortion fee. Later, a real estate businessman was gunned down as he left his offices in the middle-class central district of the capital. Jaime Quiroz Gutierrez, 59, was shot three times on New York Street in Colonia Napoles as his two bodyguards watched, some reports said. With a population of 20 million spread over the Valley of Mexico, the capital's enormous size often means multiple violent attacks can have little effect on daily life, yet the drug war has not been absent from the urban zone.

More http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/wor...y-spike-reports-acapulco-san-luis-potosi.html
 
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Corruption investigation nabs 35 Mexican cops...
:clap2:
Mexico arrests 35 police officers for 'helping Zetas'
24 September 2012 - The Zetas were set up in the 1990s by defectors from Mexico's special forces
The Mexican armed forces have arrested 35 police officers accused of having links with one of the country's most powerful drug cartels, the Zetas. The officers were arrested in operations in the eastern states of San Luis Potosi and Veracruz. A turf war between the Zetas and rival criminal organisations in Veracruz has led to some of Mexico's worst massacres in recent years. Local police officers are often accused of ties with the drug cartels.

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In a statement, the Navy said the 35 people arrested "were all police officers in the Veracruz public security department and allegedly collaborated with the Zetas criminal organisation". They were arrested on Saturday in the cities of Xalapa - capital of Veracruz state - and San Luis Potosi, but information on the operation was only released on Monday. The 35 police officers have been taken to Mexico City to be brought before the media.

Last year, the federal government deployed thousands of troops and federal police to Veracruz, a strategic state for trafficking routes into the United States. Several cartels are battling for control of the state, among them "los Zetas", says the BBC's Will Grant in Mexico. The Mexican Navy has intervened in several municipalities, taking over anti-drug duties from local police officers. The Zetas were set up originally as the armed wing of the Gulf drug cartel, but they became bitter enemies after breaking ties in 2010.

BBC News - Mexico arrests 35 police officers for 'helping Zetas'
 

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